ISSUE 11.1 WINTER/SPRING 1999

issue eleven one

INTERVIEW
If Nothing’s Funny, Nothing’s Serious: An Interview with Richard Ford

FICTION
Fifty Uselessnesses by Tibor Fischer
Only so Many Chances by Anthony Doerr
Stories:
     In Front of the Kranzler
     The Man Who Lived in West Berlin
     The Man Who Always Talked about the Past
     The Man Who Collected Landslides
     The Man Whom the Bank Refused Credit
     Special Times
     The Man Who Stood in Line
     The Man Who Read Books by Richard Wagner
Cherry Pie Red by Linda A. Fiore
The Admirable Vice Provost by Matthew David Brozik
Copies by Susan Neville

INTERVIEW
The Double Gesture: An Interview with Alyce Miller

POETRY
Leaving Loraine, OH by Donna J. Long
Hard Core Realty from Fortunes by Thomas Fink
Finale and Expeditions by Joanne Lowery
Among You, Bob in His Valley, and The Poet’s Surgery by Maria Terrone
The Disclosure by Gray Jacobik
Elegy for a Daughter by Michelle Parkinson
Poem, Confession 3.2.2, Confession 1.13.20, and The Dead by Kathleen Peirce
In the Present Time, Which is the End of the World by Eric LeMay
Condiments by Donelle R. Ruwe
Credit Repairman by Charles Harper Webb
Poem Like a Tree or a Bus by John Latta
Two Fantasies and Brothers by Nils Clausson

REVIEWS
Edwidge Danticat’s The Farming of Bones
Wallace Shawn’s Four Plays
Tam Lin Neville’s Journey Cake